No - when you stop posting childish Libturd Leftist nonsense & answer the questions
I may well consider treating you with some respect. Until then Fuck Off .
On a crisp morning in 1974, White House staffers were stunned to find their new 61-year-old President Gerald Ford doing pull-ups on a bar he'd personally installed in the doorway of the Oval Office, grunting through his reps with the same disciplined intensity he'd brought to every football practice at the University of Michigan four decades earlier. Ford didn't just believe in fitness—he lived it as a daily non-negotiable ritual, waking up every morning at 5:15 AM to swim laps in the White House pool, do countless sit-ups and push-ups, and maintain the athletic physique that had once made him a two-time MVP and helped Michigan win back-to-back national championships in 1932 and 1933. His Secret Service detail nicknamed him 'The Machine' because even after grueling 16-hour days managing economic crises and Cold War tensions, Ford would still hit his home gym for a full workout, proving that physical discipline fuels mental clarity and that presidents need strong bodies to carry the weight of a nation. Betty Ford would later recall how her husband's morning exercise routine was sacred—no meetings, no interruptions, just Jerry and his pull-up bar, his determination, and his unwavering belief that taking care of yourself isn't selfish, it's essential for taking care of others. Ford once told a reporter, 'I don't exercise because I want to live forever—I exercise because I want to live fully every single day I'm given,' and those words captured his entire philosophy: that strength isn't about vanity, it's about vitality, about showing up as your best self for the people counting on you. Even after leaving office, Ford maintained his workout regimen well into his eighties, inspiring everyone from weekend warriors to professional athletes with the beautiful reminder that age is just a number, that pull-ups at 61 or 81 are victories worth celebrating, and that the greatest exercise isn't just building muscles—it's building the mental toughness to keep showing up, keep grinding, and keep proving that discipline, consistency, and a little bit of sweat can transform not just your body, but your entire life. AND THIS IS MAINLY WHY IT'S HARD TO RESPECT PRES. TRUMP.